CHAPTER IX NOT AT BERLIN"Hanged, or condemned to penal servitude for life." There fell a dead silence after Jim Cayley uttered those ominous words. He waited for me to speak, but for a minute or more I was dumb. He had voiced the fear that had been on me more or less vaguely ever since I broke open the door and saw Cassavetti's corpse; and that had taken definite shape when I heard Freeman's assertion concerning "a red-haired woman." And yet my whole soul revolted from the horrible, the appalling suspicion. I kept assuring myself passionately that she was, she must be, innocent; I would stake my life on it! Now, after that tense pause, I turned on Jim furiously. "What do you mean? Are you mad?" I demanded. "No, but I think you are," Jim answered soberly. "I'm not going to quarrel wit

